In 2018, McIlroy, Bass and the Allens founded Detroit Youth Lacrosse. They built upon a few clinics conducted by the Conservancy, eventually fielding a 12U boys’ team that competed in four tournaments last summer.
“I met Lex [Allen IV] shortly after, and it felt like family from the go,” said McIlroy, now the program director and boys’ coach of Detroit Youth Lacrosse. “We share the same vision.”
Allen III and Bass secured grants and gear from US Lacrosse, the Sankofa Lacrosse Foundation, the Smith Family Foundation, the Community Foundation of Southeast Michigan, local colleges and other organizations. Bass and McIlroy took to the city schools, making presentations to coaches, athletic directors and administrators on the value of lacrosse.
“I tell our football coaches we’re going to keep your kids in shape, they’ll have better footwork, they’ll be energized because they’re not doing one sport year-round, and they’ll have academic opportunities available to them because of lacrosse,” McIlroy said.
“And there are therapeutic qualities to the game, which is important,” he added. “We have players that come from tough backgrounds.”
Theirs aren’t the only homecomings in this effort to grow the game. Ashlee Brown grew up not far from Chandler Park, where she’s now the girls’ coach for Detroit Youth Lacrosse after playing collegiately at Howard.
In its brief history, Detroit Youth Lacrosse has exposed more than 100 inner-city boys and girls, including Bass’ son and daughter, to lacrosse through its various clinics and events. McIlroy expects participation to grow this spring, allowing standing boys’ teams to compete in the Suburban Lacrosse League and a girls’ team to play multiple opponents in a less formal structure.
The vision: Turn Detroit into a lacrosse hotbed.
Allen IV still gets the same goosebumps as an assistant coach that he got before his first game as a kid.
“I remember last summer our first game at our first tournament, looking at the kids as we got ready for faceoff,” he said. “I felt like, ‘Wow, I’m 10 years old again, playing my first game.’ It’s so big for us as an organization to go from a few kids at a clinic to have 20 kids on a team that has gained respect from other teams. There were no teams in the city. It’s important for Detroit to have a presence in the sport, and important for people of color to be included as the sport grows.”